The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Grieving mom seeks improved support

N.S. woman says there’s little access to groups to help cope with losing a pregnancy or baby

- BY ALEX COOKE

A Nova Scotia woman who recently lost two children will be heading to Ottawa this month to urge the federal government to give more support to parents dealing with the loss of a child or pregnancy.

Paula Harmon of Dartmouth, N.S., said there’s little access to specific groups to cope with losing a pregnancy or baby, and those parents may feel out of place in standard support groups.

“There are bereavemen­t groups, but a parent who has lost a child at 17 weeks, or 20 weeks, or even a year, feels very out of step with a parent who has had a child for 30 years,” she said in a phone interview Saturday. “So they’re sitting there with people who have actually had a lifetime of memories and they can’t relate.”

Harmon’s pregnancy with fraternal twins in 2013 came as an “unexpected surprise,” but at 17 weeks gestation, one of them died and the other was given a five per cent chance of survival.

Grace was born prematurel­y, and after some hurdles in her first few months, she hardly had any health problems before her unexpected death from a bowel condition in December 2016.

Harmon remembered her daughter as a bright girl with a penchant for books and music, during her short life. Last year, she founded Gardens of Grace, an advocacy and support group to help parents understand they’re not alone and push for policy changes to make their grieving process a little easier.

“Helping people in Grace’s name seems to alleviate some of the loneliness of not having your child there and being a mother without a child,” Harmon said.

At the end of the month, Harmon will travel to Ottawa to throw her support behind a motion before Parliament that, if passed, would instruct the Standing Committee on Human Resources to study the impact of infant loss on parents and recommend that government improve the level of support for grieving parents.

“It directs (the committee) to hear from parents who are affected, to hear from organizati­ons that advocate for those parents, to hear from grief counsellor­s, and to hear from those who design the programs involved,” said Alberta MP Blake Richards, who will introduce the motion on April 27.

“Rather than presume we know the answers, let’s hear from everyone and make the best decision on this.”

Richards said one of the biggest issues is that EI parental benefits are cut off after the death of a child and any money received through those benefits after the death has to be returned.

“You can only imagine how much anguish it must add to what parents are experienci­ng,” he said. “The simple fix would be to simply allow parents to have the opportunit­y to have a little extra time to grieve.”

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